4.6 Article

NF-κB Activation Limits Airway Branching through Inhibition of Sp1-Mediated Fibroblast Growth Factor-10 Expression

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 185, Issue 8, Pages 4896-4903

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1001857

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Funding

  1. American Lung Association
  2. March of Dimes
  3. National Institutes of Health [HL-086324, HL-097195, AI-079253]
  4. Department of Veterans Affairs
  5. Neonatal Research Fellowships from Ikaria and Discovery Laboratories
  6. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development T32 Fellowship
  7. Vanderbilt University Medical Center Cell Imaging Shared Resource, NIH [CA68485, DK20593, DK58404, HD15052, DK59637, EY08126]

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Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a frequent complication of preterm birth. This chronic lung disease results from arrested saccular airway development and is most common in infants exposed to inflammatory stimuli. In experimental models, inflammation inhibits expression of fibroblast growth factor-10 (FGF-10) and impairs epithelial-mesenchymal interactions during lung development; however, the mechanisms connecting inflammatory signaling with reduced growth factor expression are not yet understood. In this study we found that soluble inflammatory mediators present in tracheal fluid from preterm infants can prevent saccular airway branching. In addition, LPS treatment led to local production of mediators that inhibited airway branching and FGF-10 expression in LPS-resistant C.C3-Tlr4(Lpsd)/J fetal mouse lung explants. Both direct NF-kappa B activation and inflammatory cytokines (IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha) that activate NF-kappa B reduced FGF-10 expression, whereas chemokines that signal via other inflammatory pathways had no effect. Mutational analysis of the FGF-10 promoter failed to identify genetic elements required for direct NF-kappa B-mediated FGF-10 inhibition. Instead, NF-kappa B activation appeared to interfere with the normal stimulation of FGF-10 expression by Sp1. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and nuclear coimmunoprecipitation studies demonstrated that the RelA subunit of NF-kappa B and Sp1 physically interact at the FGF-10 promoter. These findings indicate that inflammatory signaling through NF-kappa B disrupts the normal expression of FGF-10 in fetal lung mesenchyme by interfering with the transcriptional machinery critical for lung morphogenesis. The Journal of Immunology, 2010, 185: 4896-4903.

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